“…Generally, large rivers can act as effective barrier to gene flow in various taxonomic groups, such as mammals (e.g., Canis lupus , Carmichael, Nagy, Larter, & Strobeck, ; Pan paniscus , Eriksson, Hohmann, Boesch, & Vigilant, ), reptiles (e.g., Gymnodactylus darwinii complex, Pellegrino et al., ) and even amphibians (e.g., R. kukunoris , Zhao et al., ; S. boulengeri , Li et al., ; Ichthyophis bannanicus , Wang et al., ; Microhyla fissipes complex, Yuan et al., and N. pleskei , Zhou et al., ). However, rivers cannot limit gene flow in those species capable of swimming (e.g., Lontra canadensis , Blundell, Ben‐David, Groves, Bowyer, & Geffen, ; Ursus americanus , Cushman et al., ) or with high mobility ( Saguinus midas and Alouatta macconnelli , Lecompte, Bouanani, de Thoisy, & Crouau‐Roy, ). For deer species, such as O. virginianus (Robinson et al., ), rivers were often considered as an important geographical barrier.…”